If we want to enjoy a close relationship with God, sometimes we’ll have to wrestle with God when we just don’t understand what he’s doing (or not doing, in this case).
Read: Habakkuk 1: 1-4
Habakkuk’s name means “to embrace” or “to wrestle” in the original Hebrew. He certainly seems to live up to his name in his relationship with God. In order to enjoy the embrace of a close relationship with God, Habakkuk knows it is necessary to wrestle with some difficult questions about the way God does some things or doesn’t do others.
Phil Moore, in his book “Straight to the Heart of The Minor Prophets” reminds us that, “a relationship with God isn’t first and foremost about the things you believe about him, but about the conversations you enjoy with him.”
Habakkuk certainly speaks how he feels, and means what he prays, with courageous honesty before God. The issue here is about one of the biggest practical and intellectual problems people have with belief in a God of love…the problem of evil.
Habakkuk asks God why it is that he sees all the evil in the world and does…nothing.
The catalogue of evil includes violence, evil deeds, misery, destruction, arguing, fighting, no justice…in short, “ the wicked far outnumber the righteous”.
What’s interesting, to me, is that if, as verse one says, this is a message (the original word could be translated “burden”) that Habakkuk receives from God, then effectively Habakkuk is inspired by God to complain about God. In that sense it is very like the honest language of many of the Psalms.
For example, Psalm 13 begins: “O Lord, how long will you forget me? Forever? How long will you look the other way?” Have a look for yourself and see how like Habakkuk’s question it is.
It seems that God wants us to ask these difficult questions, and not pray dishonestly, pretending everything is fine and we’re living victorious lives. He even inspires a prophet to ask a question that has been asked myriad times since.
Do you have difficult questions about God and his ways that you have simply pushed into the dark corners of your mind so you can avoid them? They may be things that cause you to doubt and struggle with your faith, they may seem too painful to bring into the light of day. God wants each of us to have honest and open relationships with him, and longs to brings us closer. Are you prepared to take the risk of sharing these things honestly with God, so that he can increase our trust even if we can’t fully understand?


